Archive for May, 2014

STEELE INTERVIEWS: singer/ songwriter Jadea Kelly

Clover

Clover is the new album from Canadian singer/songwriter Jadea Kelly. The album’s filled with achingly beautiful, sharply crafted alt-folk songs. Bittersweet. Haunting. Melancholy. Kelly has a mesmerizing, expressive voice.

I recently spoke to Jadea Kelly while she was on a train en route to visit her parents. We had to finish up by email due to a poor connection.

Amy Steele: How did you decide you wanted to be a singer? What attracted you to singing?

Jadea Kelly: My mother tells me I was singing before I was talking. For whatever reason, I’ve always found singing natural and incredibly therapeutic.

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Amy Steele: You said that you took music lessons and singing lessons. How old were you when you started?

Jadea Kelly: I began with fiddle lessons and competitions at the age of 11 and took up guitar lessons at 15. Alongside high school vocal and instrumental class, I sang in a number of choirs and talent shows.

Amy Steele: What do you like about performing? What do you bring to music that differentiates you from others?

Jadea Kelly: Performing provides a beautiful escape for me. I enjoy the recording and writing process, but when I’m on stage I am my truest self. When I’m on stage I put myself back in the emotion, and sing from that vulnerable place. It gets the message across to the audience and engages them for longer. If anything, I suppose that differentiates me.

Amy Steele: Why did you want to be a singer/songwriter, write your own songs? Have you always liked to write and create?

Jadea Kelly: Singing and writing has always come naturally. I honestly don’t know if I would do anything other than this. I think it’s incredibly important to write and extend a creative work into the public. It touches everyone around you, and changes them. If anything, the job of the artist is to help others look within themselves.

Amy Steele: You majored in English in college and then worked in various aspects of the music industry. What was the club scene like and how did you build up a fan base as you were working a day job and writing songs to get an album together?

Jadea Kelly: At that time, I had four jobs! During the day I worked for a music publicity company, by night I worked as an usher at the Toronto symphony and during the AM I galloped around town from show to show on my bicycle. For the first time in my life, I was surrounded by other songwriters…all of whom taught me how to perform and are now my friends. Somehow, in the midst of all this, and 2 internships at record labels….I wrote and recorded my first record [Eastbound Platform].

Amy Steele: Were you living in Toronto? What is the music scene like up there?

Jadea Kelly: I have been living in Toronto for seven years now. Our music scene is busy, vibrant and filled with insanely undiscovered talent.

Amy Steele: What challenges have you faced as a women in the music business?

Jadea Kelly: Often times, as a female performer, your kindness is seen as a weakness. This happens in any business. I have learned to stay grounded, firm and work with like-minded individuals.

Amy Steele: Is blues a major influence and have there been other influences to you? [AS note: think I read that somewhere]

Jadea Kelly: I did work for a blues artist named Skaura S’Aida. She taught me a lot about confidence on stage – and in life. Very grateful for her lessons. Musically, my major influences would come from the country and folk spectrum. Huge fan of Patti Griffin, Emmy lou Harris and St Vincent [not as country and more experimental]

Amy Steele: This album Clover was inspired by time spent on your grandfather’s farm. What is the significance of that?

Jadea Kelly: When I was making that, my grandpa was retiring and my dad was taking over the farm. He’s been there four years now. Seeing my grandfather that happy was how happy I want to be. You don’t want to retire if you’re doing something you love. I wanted to remind people we’re only here for a short period of time and you should do something you love.

Amy Steele: What about “Lone Wolf?”

Jadea Kelly: I wrote that while I was on tour in Europe. Everything went wrong. It was an eye-opening experience. I was going through all these changes. I was feeling a bit bullied. I know a lot of female songwriters in this industry feel the same way. But you need to stand up for yourself and let your kindness take over.

Amy Steele: How about “You Had Me?”

Jadea Kelly: It’s a love song. They’re all such sad songs. It’s about a friend who suddenly passed away, a Portugese singer. And my partner who helped me through that time.

Amy Steele: Can you explain the impetus for the song “Clover?”

Jadea Kelly: “Clover” was named after my grandfather’s farm. When I began writing this, he was forcibly retiring from farming for health reasons. As my Dad returned to farming, to assist my Grandpa, I began to recognize the relationship between farming and working as a musician. Both professions require an immense amount of passion – and zero stability – zero guarantee of retirement and zero financial guarantees. Despite this, we both pursue it with open arms. And THAT is the message of “Clover.” To follow your passion, and live for it wholeheartedly.

Amy Steele: What inspires you?

Jadea Kelly: The songwriters around me in Toronto and around Canada.

Jadea will be performing at The Middle East Upstairs, Cambridge, Mass. on May 30.

Jadea Kelly website

purchase at Amazon: Clover

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DVD: AFTER TILLER a must-see documentary

after tiller

A powerful and inspirational documentary filmed with a calm focus through beautiful and reflective moments. Directed and produced by Martha Shane and Lana Wilson.

It’s legal to perform third-term abortions in nine states and (at the time of filming), only four doctors in the United States openly performed third-term abortions.

“At times I struggle and times I don’t and I always come back to the woman and what she’s going through and what life will this baby have. What will it mean to be alive with horrific fetal abnormalities? It’s not just about being alive. It’s about life and what does it mean.”
–Dr. Shelley Sella

“There’s two reactions to being bullied. One is to pull your head in and try to get away from the bully and the other is to go ‘oh yeah.’ That’s how I feel.”
–Dr. Susan Robinson

“(The anti-abortion threats) are a traumatic experience for everybody in my family. It’s been hard for me to feel sometimes that I can continue.”
–Dr. Warren Hern

“Things have changed since Dr. Tiller’s death. And it’s a shame George had to die to get that started. I think he did get a lot of the dialogue started that’s going on today. We don’t have Dr. Tiller anymore but we still have four of us who are still practicing and I think Dr. Tiller would be proud that we’re still carrying on his work.”
–Dr. LeRoy Carhart

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music review: Hundreds

hundreds_aftermath_cover_300-300x300

mellow electronica combined with Eva Milner’s gravely, potent vocals comparable to Dido or Shirley Manson. Title track “Aftermath” engulfs you in moody shadows and dramatic piano. “Rabbits on the Roof possesses that spiraling ephemeral 90s vibe reminiscent of Dubstar. “Beehive” stands out with cool drumming and ethereal, soaring vocals. The German sibling duo creates melancholy prettiness with dark undercurrents on this lovely mesmerizing album.

Aftermath
Sky Council
Release date: May 27, 2014

video for “Circus”

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PROFILE: singer/songwriter Kristen Ford

Boston-based singer/songwriter Kristen Ford has a plan. After Saturday’s show celebrating the release of her new album, Dinosaur, she’s packing up a van and heading out onto the road for an extensive and open-ended U.S. tour. Currently she plays an impressive 100 shows every year. She funded Dinosaurthrough a grant she received from Club Passim and money she raised via Kickstarter.

Completed in four days in what Ford described as a cohesive manner—“all in one studio, same group of people play guitar and sing at some time and give it live feel and keep it from being overproduced. Digital music can be too perfect.” Propelled by energetic guitar arrangements the power-punk-pop songs blend many elements. Folk, jazz, blues. Quite bold. It’s an organic, magnificently emotional and insightful collection of songs.

photo by Menelik Puryear

photo by Menelik Puryear

“I feel strong about a lot of things politically and socially. There are so many things I want to say. I try to sneak it in here and there.”

While she’ll be touring solo (her girlfriend will be traveling with her), Ford said she’d try to put together bands to perform in the cities that she’s able. “My passion is definitely playing in an ensemble with a band,” Ford told me when we spoke recently sitting outside at the Starbucks in Watertown.

Last fall she decided to take this leap and started applying to music festivals. She applied to 350 festivals and will be playing six including the National Women’s Music Festival in Wisconsin in August. She’ll spend July in the Midwest. She’ll travel to a dude ranch in Wyoming where she wrote a lot of the songs on this album. She worked at the ranch, entertained guests and received room and board. She’ll then swing to Utah and the Grand Canyon and to Texas.

Nothing can replace the connections and following an artist develops through extensive touring. In this digital world, social media plays an essential role in marketing and building a fan place these days. Like many musicians Ford’s built a presence on Facebook, twitter and Soundcloud. “Soundcloud is great. People are listening from all over the world. There are 300 million people in America—not everybody has to like my music but if a few people like my music and then we can connect on the internet, that’s great.”

kristen-ford_dinosaur

We discussed a few of the songs on Dinosaur

“Internet”

Ford: “It’s so distracting that bands are spending all their time promoting themselves.”

“Bulletproof”

Ford: “It’s about a bad decision and the fallout from that in relationships when you allow yourself to get exposed and it’s shocking how hurt you can get.”

“Sky is Falling”

Ford: “About the feeling that everything is fucked and you can’t buy your way out or drink your way out. In showbiz you have a lot of acquaintances, there’s constant chatter and no one gives a shit and no one listens. It’s loosely based on Less Than Zero. On the line ‘disappear here.’ It’s easy to disappear in plain sight. Keep it together on the outside and fall apart on the inside.”

“Pretty Little Mind”

Ford: “Sonically people really like this song. It feels epic after this recording. It’s about dealing with flaws but not bringing down the people around you. It’s about a one-night-stand and a DUI and wanting to protect someone from you.”

Kristen Ford performs at Middle East Club Upstairs Saturday, May 24 at 7 pm.

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ON TOUR in JUNE: Jeff Tweedy

jeff tweedy

Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter and guitarist Jeff Tweedy [Wilco] will tour this summer with a newly-formed band. He’ll play songs from a soon-to-be-released solo album as well as songs from Wilco/ Uncle Tupelo catalog.

The band features Tweedy’s 18-year old son Spencer Tweedy (The Blisters, Mavis Staples) on drums, Jim Elkington (The Horse’s Ha, Eleventh Dream Day) on additional guitars, Darin Gray (On Fillmore, Brise-Glace) on bass and Liam Cunningham (Marrow) on keyboards.

June 5–Masonic Temple–Detroit, MI
June 6–Three Rivers Arts Festival–Pittsburgh, PA
June 7–Mountain Jam–Hunter Mtn, NY
June 9–Meyerhoff Symphony Hall–Baltimore, MD
June 10–Lincoln Theatre–Washington, D.C.
June 11–The Brown Theatre on Broadway–Louisville, KY
June 16–The Pabst Theater–Milwaukee, WI
June 17–Missouri Theatre–Columbia, MO
June 18–Cain’s Ballroom–Tulsa, OK
June 21–Texas Union Ballroom–Austin, TX
June 22–Majestic Theatre–Dallas, TX
June 24–Ryman Auditorium–Nashville, TN
July 4–Ottawa Bluesfest–Ottawa, ON
July 6–Toronto Urban Roots Fest–Toronto, ON
July 12–Taste of Chicago–Chicago, IL
July 27–Newport Folk Festival–Newport, RI

Wilco website

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book review: Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932

lovers at chameleon club

Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932 by Francine Prose. Publisher: Harper (April 2014). Historical fiction. Hardcover. 448 pg. ISBN 978-0-061713781.

Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932 centers on a cabaret club, The Chameleon Club, in Paris from the late twenties through World War II. It’s a place where the disenfranchised, the strange, the neglected and the outcasts seek refuge within its safe walls at least for a while. In Yvonne’s club, cross-dressers and homosexuals can gather and be free to love and be loved and perform and dance and enjoy themselves. To be themselves without questions, without fear of judgment or penalty.

Author Francine Prose based this complex tapestry on well-known Brassi photograph “Lesbian Couple at Le Monocle, 1932.” She discovered that the woman wearing a tuxedo in the photograph, Violette Morris, was an Olympic hopeful and professional auto racer before the French government revoked her license for cross-dressing in public. Hitler invited her to the Berlin Olympics as his special guest and she became a Nazi sympathizer and spy. Prose based Lou Villars on Morris. She uses various voices and tenses to tell the stories of Villars and others associated with the Chameleon Club including a Hungarian photographer, an actress turned Baroness who bankrolls his career, an American writer and a young woman writing Villars’s biography in present day.

“As a feminist historian, I should devote more attention to the role that breasts played in Lou’s psyche, to her gender dysphoria, her sexual confusion, her lifelong discomfort with the restrictive female role. But the subject becomes much simpler when I try to think as Lou did: her breasts would make her suffer and, in her worst fantasies, kill her.”

Despite the dreamy Paris locale, the characters encounter various challenges in their personal and professional lives. Forbidden passions, impending war, questionable patriotism and sense of self. It’s carefully crafted and strikingly written. I adore the concept. Amazing, yet not, having read several of her novels, how Prose can so fluidly transition from one character’s voice to another’s and maintain the reader’s interest. Unfortunately it’s a bit too drawn out at parts and I grew interested in some characters more than others so it lagged a bit.

RATING: ***1/2/ 5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Harper Collins.

purchase at Amazon: Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932: A Novel

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NEW MUSIC VIDEOS: Tigers Jaw; Marvelous Mark; Modern Rivals

Tigers Jaw, “Hum”

churning guitar, alternating boy-girl vocals. what’s not to like? Superb song. Video shows some cool lighting effects and the Scranton, Penn. indie duo playing guitar and keyboard in random spots.

Tigers Jaw Tumblr

June 17– Middle East Downstairs, Cambridge, Mass.
July 16– Met Cafe, Providence, RI
July 17– Port City Music Hall, Portland, ME

Charmer out June 3 [Run for Cover Records]

Marvelous Mark, “Bite Me”

Cool song–garage rock with sweeping 90s indie-rock influences. Slacker video.

7″ out now [Bad Actors]

Marvelous Mark website

Modern Rivals, “The Dead Leaves”

beautiful song. not quite sure what’s going on in the video. girl in a bathtub. tarot cars. girl flipping her hair around. girl in the woods. tarot cards. keyboards. singer. tarot cards.

Cemetery Dares out now [Modern Rivals Records]

Modern Rivals Facebook

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book review: Cure for the Common Breakup

cure for common breakup

Cure for the Common Breakup by Beth Kendrick. Publisher: NAL (May 2014). Contemporary fiction. Paperback. 336 pages. ISBN13: 9780451465856.

“She’d seen the northern lights in Sweden and fed baby elephants in Thailand. She’d danced at Carnival in Brazil and gone snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef. She’d traveled all over the world having once-in-a-lifetime experiences.
But she’d never had a garden.
She’d never learned to play the piano.
She’d never let herself fall completely in love.”

Flight attendant Summer Benson lives an itinerant life, barely unpacking her suitcase, staying in one place or in one relationship for very long. Summer’s smart and independent. She doesn’t want to rely on anyone but herself. However, on a flight to Paris she considers accepting her current boyfriend’s proposal when disaster strikes. After a scary crash, he unexpectedly breaks up with her by her hospital bedside. She’s been the one to break-up with guys in the past.

Devastated and unsure about her next stage she heads to Black Dog Bay, Delaware known as the perfect place to recover from a breakup. The seaside town is idyllic with its Better Off Bed-and-Breakfast, Eat Your Heart Out bakery and Whinery bar. The town’s built itself as a breakup haven. A place for the broken-hearted to heal, to recover and gain the strength to move forward.

“Summer had never seen herself as the marrying type, and in fact had strict rules in place: Never stay in one place too long. Never stay with one man too long. She knew what would happen if she broke these rules. If she needed a man more than he needed her. She had experienced the fallout firsthand.”

Summer clicks with several locals including bookstore owner Hollis, Whinery bartender Jenna and boutique owner Beryl. She also starts dating the mayor Dutch Jansen. Of course she spars with him at first and claims he’s not her “type” and she’s never dated anyone like him before but that’s exactly why they work. Of course when things seem perfect they’re not. The town’s meanest, wealthiest resident Hattie Huntington holds a longstanding grudge against Dutch Jansen’s family. She’s bitter and making things as complicated as possible for everyone in Black Dog Bay as possible. Summer will do anything to protect her temporary new town even if she must give up her first-ever love.

Cure for the Common Breakup is a wonderful weekend/ summer read. There are both quirky and touching moments. You’ll immediately get wrapped up in Summer’s story.

RATING: ***/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from NAL/ Penguin.

purchase at Amazon: Cure for the Common Breakup

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STEELE INTERVIEWS: Gwen Florio [Dakota]

dakota

Former foreign correspondent Lola Wicks is back. The independent, outspoken, brassy reporter took a position at a small-time newspaper in Magpie, Montana. After being downsized from her job in Kabul, she left her post Baltimore to find some bliss with local sheriff Charlie [“When it came to Charlie, Lola considered herself a realist about the temporary nature of most relationships.”]. When a local Blackfeet girl, missing for months, is found dead with a strange brand on her forearm, Wicks uncovers a larger story connecting other missing girls from the reservation. Turns out she’s right but it might be more dangerous than she assumed as sex trafficking, drugs and the big money in the oil fields of North Dakota factor into the disappearance. Another thoughtful page-turner with magnificent sense of place and descriptive scenery by Gwen Florio.

Gwen and I spoke by phone recently.

Amy Steele: How did you make the jump from journalist to fiction writer?

Gwen Florio: I started writing seriously about 20 years ago. I was working for the Philadelphia Inquirer and there was a wonderful writing workshop in Philadelphia. I joined that and started working seriously on writing fiction. I read almost exclusively fiction. Joining this group gave me some guidance.

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Amy Steele: What made you write the thrillers that you’ve done?

Gwen Florio: I did not set out to write thrillers. I read a lot of literary fiction and thought that’s what I would write. I wrote some previous novels and they could easily translate to thrillers. One of them was just dreadful and just shouldn’t see the light of day. The second one was better and that one got me an agent. She couldn’t sell it and she just said “write another book.” So I had something intact which was the prologue to Montana. I googled how to write mysteries and read a lot about the genre. I really stumbled into it. I’m really glad I did.

Amy Steele: It sounds like you had to do a lot of research and there’s a particular structure.

Gwen Florio: There is a particular structure and coming across that made it really familiar to me like writing a long newspaper series or big magazine piece. Those are all really structured to keep the reader plodding along. I kinda relaxed once I had those guidelines. I rearranged some of what I’d written. It took some of the fear factor out. I could relate it back to journalism in a way that felt familiar.

Amy Steele: How has your journalism career influenced your novel writing?

Gwen Florio: It demystifies writing. I don’t sit around and wait for inspiration. I’m so used to deadlines that I just sit down and write. That’s the great gift of journalism. Writing is a job. You really tune your ear into how people talk. You’re listening for great quotes. The rhythm in that quote or anything which gives you a sense of who they are. It really helps you with dialogue. I feel like I know how to write believable dialogue. It gets you to a lot of different places and different experiences. It exposes you to things. When I was reporting my newspaper stories there was all this great information that just didn’t belong in the stories that was just so interesting. So now I can put that in my books. It wasn’t wasted.

Amy Steele: There are lots of twists in Dakota. How do you keep track of characters and plot?

Gwen Florio: Badly. I’m working on one right now. I forgot some names and I put in some lines. You’d think I would make a timeline. I’m getting better at that. I tend to go back and forth and see what I’ve written before. I don’t outline. I kind of outline as I go along. I make a little summary of each chapter so I can check back before I go on.

Amy Steele: Where did you come up with the idea for Lola Wicks?

Gwen Florio: I made her a reporter for a couple reasons. It’s the old ‘write what you know.’ Reporters in general tend not to have very exciting lives but I could make hers exciting. Also I feel bad about what’s happening in journalism so writing about her being downsized and dealing with that was my own way of saying “screw you” to the industry and highlighting what’s happening in the industry.

Amy Steele: How would you describe Lola?

Gwen Florio: She’s a person who struggles with being her better self. She’s so impatient and so focused on getting the story. I like putting her in situations where she’s actually forced to stop and pay attention. She does not like to accept help. But she has to. You can’t be a lone wolf in some of these situations especially the one I put her in and I like watching her struggle. She reluctantly accepts Jan, the other reporter, and they have a good partnership. But she’d rather not do that. She’s kind of a pain in the ass but a likeable pain in the ass.

Amy Steele: What do you like about her?

Gwen Florio: I like that she will not be deterred. She’s going to find out what happened no matter what. She does have that capacity for friendship, though she would rather not, she does yield to that. She’s never going to be a softie but some of her hard edges are sanded down.

Amy Steele: You tackle several issues in Dakota: sex trafficking and transient workers. What interests you in writing about these topics?

Gwen Florio: You see an influx of men from all over the country. Louisiana. People who worked in oil jobs that dried up. Anywhere that the housing market went bust people come to North Dakota to work. There’s been a massive change to an impoverished rural area. Flooded with men who don’t have ties to the area and flooded with money. People who live there are making a ton of money but they’re kind of trapped too. Pretty little farm towns. Isolated. Huge trucks are going by all the time or men are living next to you and coming and going at all hours. If you’re a woman there I hear it’s horrendous because you’re constantly harassed because there are so few women. I read that every woman is either packing or carrying pepper spray. I’m fascinated by that kind of social upheaval.

Amy Steele: What’s the Native American population out there?

Gwen Florio:In Montana it’s 7%. They are our largest minority group. The reservations are really isolated. For them to get jobs on the oil fields is huge. That’s why I set it up like that. I’ve done a lot of reporting from the reservations. The problems they face are so intense.

Amy Steele: I drove cross-country in my early twenties after college and my friend and I stayed on an Indian reservation in Utah. Near Bryce canyon and Zion. We felt very white.

Gwen Florio: Montana is very white. I will go for days and days without seeing a black person and it just blows my mind. Not like Philadelphia. It’s good to get in a situation again where you’re in the minority.

Dakota
by Gwen Florio
Powells.com

purchase at Amazon: Dakota

Montana
by Gwen Florio
Powells.com

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book review: Bellweather Rhapsody

bellweather rhapsody

Bellweather Rhapsody by Kate Racculia. Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (May 13, 2014). Contemporary fiction. Hardcover. 352 pages. ISBN13: 9780544129917.

The setting: the crumbling Bellweather Hotel in the Catskills during the annual Statewide festival

The cast of characters:

Lively and confident vocalist Alice Hatmaker. Alice keeps a journal where she chronicles her every thought and goal. “Her mother thinks it’s just a journal, but it’s much more than that. It’s the definitive dossier for her posthumous biographer. Alice knows how these things work: she started young, which she knows means she has to end young too—talent like hers eats you up, flames you out brighter than the sun.”

Her twin brother, apprehensive Bertram “Rabbit” Hatmaker. He’s yet to come out as gay. He might do so this weekend to his sister but he’s not sure. “And if the only thing the world saw about him was his gayness, how could anyone ever fall in love with him? Would he have to go to parades and wear rainbow-striped buttons? Would he have to love Barbra Streisand?”

Their seemingly disinterested chaperone Natalie Wilson. Turns out as a child she showed quite some promise as a pianist and a young Viola Fabian squashed any hopes she had to pursue a performance career.

Tempermental, unpredictable Scottish conductor Fisher Brodie who has his own stormy past.

Statewide head and all-around meanie Viola Fabian and her violin prodigy daughter Jill Faccelli. She might be reluctant to allow her mother to live vicariously through her. She goes mysteriously missing on the first night of the festival.

Minnie Graves. As a girl, she was a witness to the hotel murder-suicide more than a decade prior to this weekend. She’s decided to face her fears and her past by returning to the hotel.

Concierge and amateur sleuth Harold Hastings. The hotel’s his haven. His home. His life. He cherishes it and guards it.

Everyone has reasons to be at Bellweather Hotel on a winter weekend. Some for one last competition before college. Some to prove their mettle. Some harbor deep secrets and want to confront them. Some wish to challenge themselves in myriad ways. Twirl in the added stress involved with impending college admissions, being the best, present and future and never-again musical talents, hormones and a creepy old hotel where a murder-suicide occurred more than a decade ago.

Author Kate Racculia says she wrote Bellweather Rhapsody because she wanted to write a mystery/thriller that paid homage to Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None. She also wanted to use music to examine talent and possibility and also explore what it means to have your potential ahead of you or behind you. Racculia knows this music scene. She writes quite splendid and comprehensive descriptions about rehearsals for particular pieces as well as the challenges youthful musicians encounter.

Bellweather Rhapsody is an engaging, keen read brimming with colorful characters, a twisty plot, musical drama and wit. It’s quite the savvy, perceptive page-turner. Perfect for summer reading.

RATING: ****/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

purchase at Amazon: Bellweather Rhapsody

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